Tom Barnes Interviewed for BBC
Leading Medical Negligence Solicitor Shares Expertise
Tom Barnes, a senior partner and specialist medical negligence lawyer at Bolt Burdon Kemp, was recently interviewed by BBC News to discuss the ongoing crisis in NHS maternity care and the rising tide of clinical negligence claims. The interview focused on systemic failings that continue to cause preventable harm to mothers and babies across England.
Medical negligence in maternity services has been described as one of the most serious and persistent problems facing the NHS. Tom highlighted several high-profile reviews — including those at Shrewsbury, East Kent, Nottingham, and Morecambe Bay — that have repeatedly exposed the same patterns of medical negligence: failures in fetal monitoring, delays in recognising and responding to distress, and inadequate escalation to senior clinicians.
He explained that medical negligence in these cases often begins with poor interpretation of CTG traces or reluctance to act on abnormal findings. When warning signs are missed or ignored, the window for timely intervention closes, resulting in hypoxic brain injury, cerebral palsy, stillbirth, or maternal death — outcomes that independent experts later conclude were avoidable.
Why Medical Negligence Claims Continue to Rise
Tom pointed out that the cost of medical negligence claims has reached record levels, with maternity cases driving the majority of expenditure. The NHS now pays out billions annually in damages and legal fees, largely because severe birth injuries require lifelong 24-hour care costing tens of millions per child over their lifetime.
He stressed that while fair compensation is essential for families affected by medical negligence, the current system is inefficient and adversarial. Families often wait many years for answers and resolution, adding emotional and financial strain on top of the harm caused by medical negligence.
Tom argued that prevention must be the priority. Consistent national implementation of evidence-based safety bundles, adequate staffing, and a just culture where staff feel safe to raise concerns are critical to reducing medical negligence in maternity services.
Tom's Perspective on Accountability and Reform
During the BBC interview, Tom called for stronger accountability when medical negligence is identified. He noted that while individual clinicians rarely act with deliberate disregard, systemic pressures — chronic understaffing, poor training, and defensive cultures — enable medical negligence to persist and go unchallenged.
He welcomed initiatives like the Maternity Safety Support Programme and Early Notification Scheme but emphasised that real change requires sustained funding, mandatory standards, and cultural reform across every maternity unit. Medical negligence will only decline when trusts treat safety as a non-negotiable priority rather than an aspiration.
Tom also addressed the human cost behind the statistics. He spoke about meeting families who have lost babies or whose children live with profound disabilities due to medical negligence, describing their courage and determination to prevent other families suffering the same fate.
Categories: Medical Negligence, Maternity Safety, NHS Litigation, Patient Safety
Keywords: Tom Barnes BBC interview, medical negligence maternity, NHS clinical negligence costs, preventable birth injury, fetal monitoring failure, maternity safety reform, Bolt Burdon Kemp